Tom Kelley was 29 and in the Mekong Delta of Vietnam when he nearly
lost his life.A Navy ensign, he was working on a boat used to move Army troops
up and down the waterways of the jungles in the southern part of the country
when a rocket propelled grenade detonated six inches from his face. The
blast destroyed one eye and part of his head.After spending several weeks unconscious, he got reconstructive
surgery in Hawaii, where his family then lived in 1969. Then, his next
battle began.“The Navy, because of my injury, said I was not fit for duty,” said
the West Roxbury native, sitting in his current home in Somerville. “I
fought that very hard.”Kelley went all the way to the top, to Chief of Naval Operations
Admiral Elmo R. “Bud” Zumwalt, Jr., who allowed him to stay in the Navy
for another 20 years. He was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor by
President Richard Nixon in 1970.“I still loved what I was doing,” he said.After he retired as a Navy captain in 1990, Kelley eventually got
a job at the Massachusetts Department of Veteran's Services, which he headed
for 12 years until his retirement in January. In that position he advocated
for the half-million or so veterans in the state, working with many personally
to help get them health care and other services.Kelley, 71, will be honored on May 13 in Boston at a fundraiser
for the Soldiers Legacy Fund, which helps the children of Massachusetts
service members killed in Afghanistan and Iraq to pay for college.The idea for the event was the idea of former gubernatorial candidate
Charlie Baker, who knew of Kelley through a mutual friend. One day a couple
months ago, Baker called Kelley out of the blue and pitched the idea. Coincidentally,
the date for it ended up to be Kelley's birthday.“At first, I didn't see the need for it,” said Kelley about the
event. “But the more I thought about it, I thought it would be a chance
to help out a worthy organization.”Baker said that he knew of Kelley's work at the state, and that
“everybody just had wonderful things to say about him.” After Kelly left
his post in January, Baker says he kept waiting for someone to organize
an event to honor him. When no one did, Baker did it himself. He proposed
making it a fundraiser for the Soldiers Legacy Fund, which he said ultimately
convinced Kelley to go along with it.

Read more: Somerville's Tom Kelley: A salute to a life of military
service - Somerville, Massachusetts 02144 - Somerville Journal http://www.wickedlocal.com/somerville/news/x2022708132/Somervilles-Tom-Kelley-A-salute-to-a-life-of-military-service#ixzz2LgT4kC3X

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